Financial Daily from THE HINDU group of publications
Wednesday, Sep 29, 2004

News
Features
Stocks
Cross Currency
Shipping
Archives
Google

Group Sites

Industry & Economy - Power


Price bids for Bidadi to open next month

C. Shivkumar

Bangalore , Sept. 28

UNDETERRED by the volatile international oil markets, Karnataka Power Corporation Ltd (KPCL) has decided to go ahead with the price bids for fuel supply to the 1400-MW Bidadi gas station.

According to sources, the price bids would open in the second half of October. At present, there are three technically qualified bidders for the project — the ONGC-Petronet combine, the IOC-Petronas of Malyasia combine and Reliance Industries Ltd (RIL).

They said that the bid conditions were modified in line with the demands made by some of the bidders. Under the modified conditions, contract execution terms were made flexible. The timeframe prescribed is between 36 months and 48 months from the date of awarding the contract.

The fuel supply contract is for a period of 15 years with a grace period of another two years.

The Bidadi station is expected to require at least 1.4 million tonnes of gas per year, assuming a plant load factor of 85 per cent. This translates into about 73 million British thermal units. (51.81 MMBTU = one tonne).

The sources said that the modifications were made as bidders such as the IOC and the ONGC combines would require longer period for implementation, since their projects involved setting up regassification facilities.

However, in the case of RIL no regassification or liquiefication facilities would be necessary since the gas is to be sourced from its gas field in the Krishna-Godavari basin.

All the three suppliers have already been told that the price bids for the Gandhar and Kawas contracts would be the benchmark. For the 648-MW Gandhar and the 645-MW Kawas, RIL had emerged as the lowest bidder, quoting a delivery point tariff of $2.97 per million British thermal units (MMBTU). Inclusive of duties, local taxes and transmission losses, the final delivered tariff is estimated at about $3.2 per MMBTU.

However, industry sources said there were some initial uncertainties about the bidders' ability to meet the NTPC (National Thermal Power Corporation) benchmark. This was on account of the international oil spikes. Two of the largest Asian consumers of gas currently have tariffs linked to crude prices. With oil prices at over $50 barrel or $367 per tonne, the sources said that the KPCL benchmark was initially seen as too rigid. This was because two of the short-listed bidders would be sourcing gas from West Asia or from Malaysia.

But the sources said that some of the crude-linked long-term contracts negotiated by Japan and Korea had begun maturing and were due for renegotiation. These consumers along with India and China have begun demanding that gas tariffs be delinked from crude prices.

Instead these consuming countries have sought long-term supply contracts. Such contracts allowed suppliers to insulate themselves from oil prices and at the same consumers were allowed a fixed price over a long period. Besides new suppliers like Russia from the Siberian gas fields have begun deliveries on the basis of fixed price contracts. As a result, West Asian and Malaysian suppliers were expected to relent allowing for fixed price contracts along with tariffs linked to the costs of extraction.

Such a price structure, the sources said would help beat down gas tariffs for the Bidadi plant even lower than the NTPC benchmark.

More Stories on : Power | Petroleum | Karnataka

Article E-Mail :: Comment :: Syndication :: Printer Friendly Page



Stories in this Section
Consumer durables becoming dearer this festive season


We may not meet 10th Plan targets, says Pranab
Kerala records tardy growth in revenue receipts: Study
Govt to once again dip into PSU reserves to cover revenue shortfall
Govt plans to save Rs 3,000 cr through austerity measures
Effluent trigger ruled out in Thiruvananthapuram beach
Kamal Nath to attend bilateral meetings during Europe tour
EU regulation on trade preference likely in Oct
Non-oil trade with UAE touches $7.14 b
Apollo launches telemedicine link with Pak
Unease in Gulf, Nigeria makes oil, financial markets jittery
Shell Hazira opposed to LNG imports under f.o.b.
Scarce commodity
Regulator asks MSEB, State Govt to settle dues
NTPC hopes to finish TN project study by Dec
Price bids for Bidadi to open next month
CM to open Kerala Travel Mart at Kochi
AP panel to monitor talks with Naxalites
Zee Tele gets nod to launch sports channel
Zee has not met eligibility criteria: ESPN-Star
`Thai trade pact no threat to CTV sector'
`Withdraw special excise duty on soft drinks'
AP Govt moves to revive handloom sector
`Mining hits women hard'
Telugu film industry to set up monitoring cells to curb piracy
`Popcorn' team arrives
Post offices give swanky banks a run for their money
Half-a-day's pay, but a big change for the children
Rate slab fixed for SGSY loans
Banks told to help rural women in AP
Chidambaram for flexibility in labour markets
C1 India goes live with e-tendering platform
Management meet on Oct 7
Travel Mart at Colombo
In Thiruvananthapuram today
In Hyderabad today
Ayurveda resort launched



The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Archives | Contacts | Subscription
Group Sites: The Hindu | Business Line | Sportstar | Frontline | The Hindu eBooks | The Hindu Images | Home |

Copyright © 2004, The Hindu Business Line. Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu Business Line